Albert Namatjira

(1902 to 1958)

Source: National Library of Australia, NLA
an22839230

Albert Namatjira, born on Hermannsburg Mission in 1902 of Aranda
parents, became, in his lifetime, the most well-known and admired
Aboriginal person in Australia. For a time, he was held up as an
example of the success of the assimilation policy.

Artist Rex Battarbee had, in response to Albert's interest,
taught him the principles of landscape painting in watercolours.
Exhibitions initially arranged by Battarbee were a sell-out and, by
1954, Albert was presented to the Queen and had held exhibitions in
Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne.

Albert had been baptised when he was three, when his parents
converted to Lutheran Christianity. He was also, however, initiated
into manhood according to Aranda traditions. When he was eighteen
he eloped with Ilkalita, and initially lived outside the
Hermannsburg Mission as his wife was not only a member of a kinship
group forbidden to him, but not a Christian. On their return to the
Mission in 1923 with their three children Enos, Oscar and Maisie,
Ilkalita converted to Christianity, taking the name Rubina. They
settled in Hermannsburg, and over the next two decades Rubina gave
birth to seven more children.

The material rewards which flowed as a result of Albert's
artistic success - a truck to make his painting trips easier, money
and the goods it could purchase in Melbourne or Sydney - were
shared amongst his kin folk according to cultural expectation.

As the wealth flowed in, however, Albert grew increasingly
troubled. In 1954 he attempted to buy land in Alice Springs to
build a house, but was refused. At this time, under the
Aboriginals' Ordinance, he did not have the rights of
other Australian citizens.

When the Northern Territory Welfare Ordinance came into
operation in 1957, Albert Namatjira's name was not on the list of
wards who would be controlled by this legislation. This meant that
he was an Australian citizen. He was now permitted to drink
alcohol, but not with his relatives who were wards of the state.
When a young woman was killed as a result of a drinking party at
his camp at Morris Soak, Albert was back in the headlines, this
time as the possible supplier of the alcohol which led to the
drunken fight that resulted in her death. Some months later, Albert
was charged with allowing Henoch Raberaba, a relative, access to a
bottle of rum. He was found guilty and sentenced to six months in
gaol. An appeal failed and Albert served a reduced three-month
sentence at Papunya Reserve.

Albert Namatjira was broken by these events. Although his
sentence was reduced for good behaviour, and he was reunited with
his wife of 38 years, he seemed to have lost the desire to paint.
Less than a year after his release, he died of a heart attack. The
Australian public expressed shock and outrage at the time of his
trial and his subsequent death, which many considered was not
unrelated to the earlier sentence.

Further reading

Nadine Amadio, Albert Namatjira: The Life and Work of an
Australian Painter, Macmillan, South Melbourne, 1986